I personally detest the current trend of taking older classic work and blowing it up like a billboard. And it's a downright silly to state that one didn't "notice grain" at a 50X enlargement. Heck, at that size the whole thing is downright mush anyway if you view it up close. All it is, is a billboard, intended for a "normal viewing distance" of a quarter mile away, going past it at 70mph. What the heck does that prove?
With respect, I suggest it proves that if you view a good photo at such a distance that you can appreciate the whole composition, graininess is not a distraction; ...
Thank you so much - grateful that you bothered and very happy that you were entertained.I followed the link to your site Jonathan, and enjoyed myself while there.
I agree about the heading south I suppose, but not for the reason of print size. (I mean, none of the big prints I saw were new work, and the smaller prints are right there to be enjoyed if that's more your speed. They didn't destroy the smaller prints.) It's more for lack of editing. It seems there is a new Eggleston tome every couple of years now with another thousand previously unpublished images from the 1950s or whatever. A little more selectivity would be better IMHO but I suppose scholars and completists might like the new/old stuff that keeps coming out. It's not for me.Well, that's nice. But things started going south for him long ago, before Inkjet ever was an option, when he tried going large to begin with. I'm not claiming it never works for 35mm originals, but certainly not in his case. It's like just adding more and water to the soup until it's not the same thing at all. No, I don't poo-poo the new ones; I'd rather outright poop on them. One reason I so seldom go to museums and galleries any more - It's all gotten Sooooo predictable. One unthinking lemming in line after another, after another, after another ....... But then everyone will get fed up, and a whole new trend will dominate, probably Minox contact prints one after another, after another ....,
My personal skepticism would ask, that if one encountered some of those very same over-blown pictures somewhere else, entirely detached from the Eggleston signature, would they be impressed at all?
Its a good a combination and one I have been using for years. D76 or ID11, which ever is the cheapest at the time of purchase.Well I use FP4 in D76 at 1:1 and have used nothing else for many years. Perhaps I'm missing out on these wonderful variations.
Gotta say, that is an absolutely gorgeous photo.Juan, this is FP4+ in Perceptol, available window light. I'm afraid it's a edge-sharpened scan of the 35mm negative. The white specks visible in the detail are a dust problem in the scanner.
View attachment 296480
View attachment 296484
I can show you the same film and subject developed in Rodinal, which has a reputation for high sharpness, and in ID-11, which is reputed to have a "soft" image. The detail revealed by ID-11 is far greater than that from the Rodinal negs. This is simply because Rodinal's massive grain and poor shadow rendering obscure image detail that ID-11 is able to resolve.
(By Pete Andrews, photo.net, 2006)
“1+0“ what’s that? Stock?And this mirrors what Richard Henry's microdensitometry study found - and what anyone who uses these developers with even a fragment of process control will observe if printing using a good enlarger/ lens or a scanner with good MTF.
I'd add that 1+3 and 1+1 ID-11/ D-76 with FP4+ are much harder to distinguish than people might assume - and that 1+0 might have a small edge in terms of maximising low frequency sharpness & minimising high frequency sharpness obscuring visual granularity.
Thank you so much, Helge! Made a memorable meal too.Gotta say, that is an absolutely gorgeous photo.
The tonality, the composition, the motif.
Reminds me of Roman still life mosaics and paintings of food, in it’s 2 1/2D ness.
“1+0“ what’s that? Stock?
I'd think that it matters a lot. Never seen that notation used like that.Yes, not that it matters, it's the same thing.
I see it all the time now.I'd think that it matters a lot. Never seen that notation used like that.
Dilution | 20C Dev Time |
1 + 0 | 5.0 minute |
1 + 1 | 7.0 minute |
1 + 2 | 10.5 minute |
1 + 3 | 12.0 minute |
1 + 5 | 13.0 minute |
Yes it does, but only after reassurance and explanation.I see it all the time now.
It makes a lot of sense in a table that lists several dilutions, and the corresponding development times for each such dilution.
Something like this made up example.
Dilution 20C Dev Time 1 + 0 5.0 minute 1 + 1 7.0 minute 1 + 2 10.5 minute 1 + 3 12.0 minute 1 + 5 13.0 minute
It would, to many.“Stock” would be self explanatory.
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